"The greatest philosopher of the twentieth century may not have been Wittgenstein, or Russell (and he certainly wasn't Heidegger)
but he may have been a somewhat obscure and conservative Australian
philosopher named David Stove (1927-94). If he wasn't the greatest
philosopher of the century, Stove was certainly the funniest and
most dazzling defender of common sense . . ."
(
source)

Popper and After: Four Modern Irrationalists(Pergamon, 1982),
reprinted as Anything Goes (Macleay
Press, 1998) and Scientific Irrationalism: Origins of a Postmodern Cult (Transaction, 2000) (mocks the irrationalist views on science of Popper, Kuhn,
Lakatos and Feyerabend, and attributes those errors to their following
Hume in thinking all logic is deductive) (See Keith Windschuttle's
introduction to the Macleay Press edition; a a review; some
criticism.)

The Rationality of Induction (Clarendon, 1986)
(revives D.C. Williams' justification of induction relying on
the fact that the vast majority of samples of a population
match the population in composition) (a review)